Recently I was talking to a friend in Malaysia, and she asked me to define what does farce means? I was startled at her question first and that of telling her that it involves a ridiculous situation but then I asked her to wait until the weekend and read my blog to have a better insight on the word. The last Mughal Emperor of India Bahadur Shah Zafar ascended the throne in 1837 when he was little over 60 years of age. He was last in the lineage of Mughal emperors who ruled over India for about 300 years. Bahadur Shah Zafar was a weak ruler who came to the throne when the British domination over India was strengthening, and the Mughal rule was nearing its end. The British had curtailed the power and privileges of the Mughal rulers to such an extent that by the time of Bahadur Shah Zafar, the Mughal rule was confined to the Red Fort. Bahadur Shah Zafar was obliged to live on British pension, while the reins of real power lay in the hands of the East India Company. It was at the time of Bahadur Shah that the War of Independence in 1857 started. In Bahadur Shah Zafar the freedom fighters found the symbol of freedom and therefore nominated him as their Commander-in-Chief. In the initial stages, the freedom fighters were successful, but later on, the active and organised British forces defeated them. Bahadur Shah, who had been proclaimed as an emperor of the whole of India, was overthrown. He got arrested from Humayun’s tomb, in Delhi, where he was hiding with his three sons and a grandson. Captain Hodson killed his sons and grandson, and their severed heads were brought before him. Bahadur Shah Zafar himself was tried for treason. He was exiled to Yangoon in Myanmar, in the year 1858 where he lived his last five years and died in 1862 at the age of 87.

As of the trial of the last Emperor of India many questions arise in my mind, and I keep pondering I may be right, and I may be wrong, but in my opinion only I feel that had Bahadur Shah Zafar been conversant with international law, he might have questioned the very legitimacy of the trial he was made to face. The last Mughal was charged with sedition which means acting rebelliously and promoting rebellion against the government. Now my first question is that who comprised the government of India in 1857? If technically to be evaluated then wasn’t it Bahadur Shah himself. He was the Emperor of India, and though he had lost all power, he was the legal ruler of the country. The East India Company was only an agent of the Mughal emperor, that status having been given to it by Shah Alam in 1764.

If my above argument has some credence so how could the emperor be charged with sedition and was he rebelling against his own government? The Company could have abolished the title of Badshah as suggested by Lord Dalhousie but it chose not to. Bahadur Shah was past 80 and was ailing. The Company preferred to wait for the death of the emperor to remove the legal anomaly which recognised the Mughal emperor as a de jure ruler while the Company constituted the de facto government. The East India Company and the British Government shouted their lungs out that the Mughal Emperor alluded to recalcitrance, but if to be fair in the eyes of the justice I fail to understand that even the so-called mutiny could not be considered an insurgency as the sepoys did not revolt against the sovereign of the land, i.e. Bahadur Shah; when the army denied the authority of the Company, it appealed to the Emperor to resume his sway. However, these more excellent legal points were not raised before the commission constituted by the company to hold Bahadur Shah’s trial. The emperor was not provided with legal assistance. He was too old and infirm to understand the implications of the trial at which he was pronounced guilty and exiled to Rangoon.

Bahadur Shah Zafar II. (1775-1862), in May 1858, “in captivity in Delhi awaiting trial by the British for his support of the Uprising of 1857-58” and before his departure for exile in Rangoon. This is possibly the only photograph ever taken of a Mughal emperor.

Now coming back to the topic that should I not describe the trial of Bahadur Shah as a farce? If a little research be done then it will be evident that there was no danger to the government and that there was no need to introduce the harsh measures against Indians advocated by some Englishmen, and it be full with criticism which at that time seemed vulgar and monotonous, but which we must now pronounce to be wicked and blasphemous. For what could be more foolhardy than to assert that external circumstances had granted us a right to destroy a nation in our fury? — To slay and burn, and plunder, not in the cause of order and civilisation, but in the name of our insatiable vengeance, and our imperial displeasure. I hope I made myself clear on the meaning of farce.

ACTOR - This world is a stage & we are mere actors. We come forward perform our characters and then leave the stage! Have done a couple of stage plays...

Wannabe JACK of ALL with a Motto to bring an Oscar home to Pakistan and is interested in Swimming, Driving, Dinning, Movies, and Reading & Plants. In short a person who believes that human dignity is a right of every individual.